I'm a general practitioner, and I'm seeing a worrying trend of patients presenting with common infections that aren't responding to first-line antibiotics, which I suspect points to a broader issue of antimicrobial resistance. I'm trying to be more judicious in my prescribing, but patient expectations for a quick fix often create pressure. For other clinicians, how are you navigating conversations about watchful waiting or alternative treatments when antibiotics might not be appropriate, and what resources do you use to stay updated on local resistance patterns?
Local resistance data is your best friend here. Check your clinic’s antibiogram (many hospitals publish them) or pull regional/state data, then align your first-line choices with current patterns. Pair that with established guidelines (IDSA or NICE) so you have a defensible plan when pressure to prescribe pops up.
Explain up front that most common infections in primary care are viral, and antibiotics mostly don’t help. Set expectations that if symptoms aren’t improving in 48–72 hours, or if they worsen, the patient should return for re-evaluation rather than just taking a pill.
A practical route is to bring in a pharmacist or nurse to do a quick stewardship check on antibiotic prescriptions, and consider slow-path approaches like rapid tests (strep, CRP) to guide whether antibiotics are actually needed.
Delayed prescriptions can be very effective in reducing unnecessary antibiotic use. Give patients a plan: start with home care, and fill the prescription only if there’s no improvement or if warning signs appear, with a follow-up check-in.
Use a simple shared decision‑making tool or brief counseling script to discuss benefits, harms, and alternatives; document the patient’s choice in the chart, and revisit it at follow-up so people feel heard and involved.
For practical ongoing updates, subscribe to local health department or hospital outbreak bulletins, CDC AR threat reports, and regional antibiograms. Also tap into CLSI M100 guidelines and the relevant IDSA/NICE guidelines for common infections to keep your practice current.
Incorporate non-antibiotic strategies and safety nets: ensure hydration, rest, and symptom relief; discuss when vaccines reduce infection risk; and consider watchful waiting with a clear return plan, so you’re not rushing to antibiotics when they’re unlikely to help.